Sunday, 18 November 2018

Pseudo-Skepticism: A Case Study - Consciousness Unbound

Ardent adherents of The Anomalist will recall past battles with so-called skeptics, calling them out on their bullshit, but those skirmishes are a shadow of Michael Grosso's umbrage for Joe Nickell. By all means study Mike's technique, his deconstruction of their flawed ontologies in staunch defense of St. Joseph of Copertino and his hagiography. One will find their claws a bit sharper the next time a pseudoskeptic dares to frame their opinions as empirical fact. With Grosso's words still ringing in your ears, Francisco Mejia Uribe harmonizes with the argument of Believing Without Evidence Is Always Morally Wrong. The philosophies of William Clifford are more profound today, than when they were first written in the 19th century, where beliefs are manipulated in a world demanding more responsibility on the behalf of audiences to stay frosty in the midst of "fake news" and propaganda. (CS)

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from THE ANOMALIST http://bit.ly/2ONaD6B

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